Costs/Tuition and Fees

Tuition and fees reflect the 2012–13 rates as established by the Maryville University Board of Trustees, effective Summer 2012:

For Undergraduate Students:

Daytime:

Full-time tuition (12–18 credits)

$11393/semester

Part-time tuition (1–11 credits)

$683/credit hour

Overload Charge (more than 18 credits)

$683/credit hour

Private/Applied Music Instruction:

Private music lessons

$683/credit hour

Plus private lesson course fee

$365/credit hour

Transcript posting fee –

$25/credit hour

approved off-campus lessons

Weekend and Evening College:

Full-time tuition (13–18 credits)

$11393/semester

Part-time tuition (1–12 credits)

$547/credit hour

Overload Charge (more than 18 credits)

$547/credit hour

Technology Fee (Fall, Spring and Summer terms):

Full-time students

$325/semester

Part-time students*

$162.50/semester

* not if only audit or high school bridge

Student Activity Fee:

Full-time students (not WEC)

$105/semester*

Part-time students (not WEC)

$52.50/semester*

* Fall and Spring only

Summer Session Courses (2010):

Full-time (13–18 credits)

$11393/summer

Part-time (1–12 credits)

$547/credit hour

Overload charge (more than 18 credits)

$547/credit hour

For Graduate Students:

All Master’s Programs:

Full-time rate (12–18 credits)

$11393/semester

Part-time rate (1–11 credits)

$701/credit hour

Overload charge (more than 18 credits)

$701/credit hour

Master’s in Education

for Professional Educators (1-11 credits)

$493/credit hour

To determine eligibility, call the School of Education, 314.529.9486.

Doctorate in Education (1-11 credits)

$788/credit hour

Technology Fee (Fall, Spring and Summer Terms):

Full-time students

$325/semester

Part-time students

$162.50/semester

Summer Session Courses (2010) :

Full-time (12–18 credits)

$11393/summer

Part-time (1–11 credits)

$547/credit hour

Overload charge (more than 18 credits)

$547/credit hour

Student Housing:

Cookie and T.R. Potter Hall

Triple Occupancy (room only) $7585/9-month continuous

Double Occupancy (room only) $8564/9-month continuous

Single Occupancy (room only) $9649/9-month continuous

Duchesne or Mouton Residence Halls:

Double Occupancy (room only)

$7042/9-month continuous

Single Occupancy (room only)

$8042/9-month continuous

Student Apartments:

4-bedroom unit (per person)(room only)

$ 8484/9-month continuous

2-bedroom unit (per person)(room only)

$9070/9-month continuous

.

Summer session (Apartments):

4-bedroom unit (per person)(room only)

$2724/All-Summer rate

4-bedroom unit (per person)(room only)

$231/week on a weekly basis

2-bedroom unit (per person)(room only)

$3123/All-Summer rate

2-bedroom unit (per person)(room only)

$264/week on a weekly basis

Beginning with Fall 2012, all residential students are required to have a meal plan. The minimum meal plan requirement for Resident Hall students is Plan C. The minimum meal plan requirement for Apartment students is Plan F.

Price is for fall and spring semesters, including breaks.

All residential students must have a minimum meal plan.

Resident Hall students may upgrade from Plan C to Plan A or Plan B.

Apartment students may upgrade from Plan F to Plan A or Plan B or Plan C or Plan D or Plan E.

Resident Hall Studnets (minimum required is Plan C)

Plan A $2800

Plan B $2500

Plan C $2200 (minimum required)

Apartment Students (minimum required is Plan F)

Plan D $1400

Plan E $1250

Plan F $1100 (minimum required)

Miscellaneous Fees:

Admission Application Fee

Undergraduate Daytime and WEC

$30.00 paper (Free online)

International (degree-seeking)

$40.00

Graduate Programs

$35.00

ACT Residual Test

$60.00

Audit Fee (with permission of dean)

$250/course

Background Check for Health Professions’ Clinicals

Contact Nursing Department

Continuing Education & Distance Learning:

Course fee for each one-credit online course

$95.00

Damage Deposits:

Residence halls

$150.00

Student Apartments

$300.00

Online Payment Plans:

Monthly Payment Plan Participation Fee (up to 5 payments)

$45.00/semester

Late payment fee (each late payment)

$25.00

Grade Dependent Employer Reimbursement Plan Participation Fee

$45.00/semester

Evaluated Credit Posting:

CLEP

$20/credit hour

Prior Learning Assessment

$40/credit hour

Speech or ISYS Waiver

$15/credit hour

Graduation Fee:

Undergraduate

$75.00

Graduate

$100.00

High School Bridge Program

$100/credit hour

Late Payment Fee (assessed after payment deadline)

$40.00

Matriculation Fee

(new full-time day freshmen and transfers)

$100.00

Nursing Testing

varies depending on program/semester

Parking:

Permits

no charge

Fines

$15.00

in Handicapped space

$50.00

Replacement Fees:

Student ID Card

$10.00

Lost Parking Permits

$5.00

Returned Check

$25.00

Student Teaching

$100.00

Transcripts

$5.00

♦ Additional fees may be assessed for selected classes or labs.
♦ Fees are non-refundable.

Deposits

Undergraduate Students

Upon receipt of a letter of admission to the day program at Maryville, each prospective student must submit an enrollment tuition advance payment of $100 to hold a place in the entering class. The advance payment applies toward expenses for the student’s first term of enrollment at Maryville. This advance payment is refundable upon written request received on or before May 1 for students entering the summer or fall term and on or before December 1 for the spring term.

University Housing and Food Service

The Housing Contract is for the entire academic year. Each student wishing to live in university apartment housing must submit a room/damage deposit of $300 (of which $25 is non-refundable). Each student wishing to live in the residence halls must submit a room/damage deposit of $150 (which $25 is non-refundable). This deposit secures a space for the student in University housing and serves as a damage deposit.

New Students to Housing: If the Residential Life Office receives written notice of cancellation of a signed contract by May 1st for the fall semester, December 1 for the spring semester and May 1 for summer session(s) prior to the beginning of any contract period, a refund of the remaining deposit will be made. Cancellations after May 1st result in forfeiture of the deposit.

Returning students will forfeit their room/apartment deposit plus a $250 contract breakage fee if they chose to cancel their housing contract after they have signed up.

The residence hall contract costs include both room and board charges. All students living in the residence halls are required to have a board plan. The apartment contract costs include both room and board charges, except for those apartment residents prior to 2009-2010 academic year, if they have never chosen a meal plan. University housing and board charges are made on an academic year basis. Reductions are not made for weekends or other time spent off-campus.

Mouton and Duchesne Hall rooms are offered on a double-occupancy basis except when space is available for single-occupancy rooms. Maryville Hall rooms are offered on a triple-occupancy basis and double-occupancy basis except when space is available for single-occupancy rooms. Apartment housing offers private bedrooms for each resident in either four-bedroom/two-bath or two bedroom/ two-bath units. During vacation periods and the summer months, the University reserves the right to limit access to or determine which facilities will remain open. The University reserves the right not to renew a student’s housing contract at the end of any term. Student contracts may be terminated at any time for a violation of the terms and conditions therein.

Financial Responsibility

Payment

If the student’s financial aid amount is less than 100 percent of the semester charges, it is the student’s responsibility to make the necessary payment arrangements with the Student Service Center for the remaining amount by the semester payment due date posted.

The financial aid award letter found in Access Maryville will verify the amount of financial aid accepted by the student. Financial aid is not disbursed to the student’s account until the semester begins. Some external funding sources send payment later in the semester. Students with confirmed accepted awards may take credit for all funding regardless of the actual payment date as long as it is within the first half of the semester.

Students who are registered are responsible for the session’s tuition and fees unless they notify the Student Service Center (or other appropriate registration center) prior to the beginning of their classes that they do not plan to attend. Non-attendance does not establish a basis for nonpayment. If payment arrangements have not been made by the semester’s payment due date, there is a late payment fee of $40. The University reserves the right to withdraw any student who fails to meet his/her financial obligations to the University. Students who are withdrawn for nonpayment are liable for all charges on their student accounts at the time of withdrawal.

Students with delinquent accounts from prior terms may be deleted from classes the day following the applicable payment due date.

In the event it is necessary to use external collection procedures to collect amounts not paid when due, the student will pay all legal fees and other reasonable collection costs and charges associated with collection, up to 50 percent of the unpaid balance. Registration is not permitted for students carrying outstanding balances from a previous semester until those balances have been paid in full. Students who are in debt to the University at the end of any term are not permitted to receive transcripts, recommendations, placement services, or diplomas, etc., until all bills have been paid. Late fees may be assessed on past due accounts.

All expenses are subject to change as deemed necessary by Maryville University. Some courses such as clinical and laboratory courses require additional fees. All fees are nonrefundable.

Payment Options

All semester charges must be paid by one or a combination of the following payment options:

Monthly Semester Payment Plan

Monthly Semester Payment Plan - Your semester charges (less any financial aid), will be divided over a five-month period for Fall and over a five-month period for Spring. Summer balances are divided into a four-month period. A $45 fee per semester is charged up front to participate in this plan. Late fees are assessed on all overdue accounts.

Payments for Fall are due July 15, August 15, September 15, October 15 and November 15.

Payments for Spring are due December 15, January 15, February 15, March 15, and April 15.

Payments for Summer are due May 1, June 15, July 15, August 15.

International Student Monthly Plan - Your semester charges (less any financial aid), will be divided over a four-month period for for Fall and over a four-month period for Spring. Summer balances are divided into a three-month period. A $45.00 per semester is charged up front to participate in this plan. Late fees are assessed on all overdue accounts.

Payments for Fall are due September 1, October 1, November 1, and December 1.

Payments for Spring are due February 1, March 1, April 1, and May 1.

Payments for Summer are due June1, July 1, and August 1.

Employer Tuition Assistance

If a company pays directly to Maryville University or to the student, in advance of taking coursework, payments need to be submitted to the Student Service Center by the semester payment due date. If the student has not received the company check by the semester payment due date, the student must complete, sign, and submit a Semester Payment Agreement form by the semester payment due date, indicating an estimated date of receipt of the company’s check.

If a company needs to be billed, authorizations, vouchers, approval tuition forms, etc. need to be submitted to the Student Service Center by the semester payment due date. Upon receipt of the authorized billing forms, the company will be billed approximately four weeks after the semester begins. If the student has not received authorization, voucher, approval tuition forms, etc., from the company by the payment due date, the student must complete, sign, and submit a Semester Payment Agreement form indicating an estimated date of receipt of the forms.

If a company pays directly to the student upon completion of the semester work, Maryville offers a Grade Dependent Payment Plan in which your payment is deferred until one month after the completed semester in order to defer tuition by the payment due date.

This plan is offered online only

Each semester you must submit verification that you are eligible for your company reimbursement and when payment may be expected, to your registration site. A letter from your Human Resources Office on company letterhead explaining the policy is acceptable.

An email will be sent to your Maryville email address instructing you to go online and enroll in our Grade Dependent Payment Plan.

A $45 fee per semester is charged up front for participation in this plan.

Semester Payment Agreement

If the previous options do not apply, a Semester Payment Agreement must be completed at the Student Service Center, Gander Hall, Suite 124 by the semester’s payment due date. This agreement is a contract between the student and the University outlining payment arrangements.

For more information regarding completing the forms required and making payment, call the Student Service Center at 314.529.9360.

Pay With Financial Aid

If you have successfully completed the financial aid process and accepted aid covers the entire balance, you need make no further payment arrangements. Follow up with any needed financial aid paperwork to insure timely disbursement of funds.

If accepted aid does not cover the entire balance, you will need to pay the difference in full or enroll in one or more of the applicable payment plans listed above.

Federal Parent Loan (PLUS)

Parents may use the Federal Parent Loan to pay the difference between direct and indirect costs and the student’s financial aid. This may be arranged through the University. If the entire financial aid award including the Parent Loan exceeds direct cost, the overage may be used to charge books and supplies from the Maryville bookstore to the student’s account. It will be refunded to either the student or parent once charges on the account have been deducted as of the date of disbursement. Any charge made after the refund is issued will be billed to the student.

Withdrawal and Refund Policies

Students considering withdrawal should consult with their instructor and their adviser. Withdrawal may affect academic progress, financial aid eligibility and University financial obligations. In any withdrawal, students are responsible for obtaining information concerning the effect on academic progress, financial aid eligibility and University financial obligations.

The Registrar determines the date of withdrawal.

Undergraduate Students Withdrawal from a Course

To withdraw from a course, the student must complete a course withdrawal form and obtain the adviser’s signature. The course withdrawal is not complete until the withdrawal request has been processed by the Registrar. Check the academic calendar (www.maryville.edu) for withdrawal deadlines. It is the student’s responsibility to obtain the necessary signatures and submit the form to the Student Service Center (or for WEC students to the Weekend and Evening College Office) for processing. Students who withdraw from a course before the applicable deadline will receive a withdrawal (“W”) designation on their transcript. Students who withdraw after the deadline will receive a letter grade based on their level of fulfillment.

Students who withdraw from a 6 or 8 week course have a different withdrawal deadline than the 16-week courses. Check the Maryville website (www.maryville.edu) for the withdrawal deadlines for all courses.

Withdrawal from the University

Students who find it necessary to withdraw from all courses must complete an institutional withdrawal form and obtain their adviser’s signature. The institutional withdrawal form must be returned to the Student Service Center for processing before the withdrawal will take effect. Weekend and Evening College students may submit the institutional withdrawal form to either the Student Service Center or the Weekend and Evening College Offices.

Institutional withdrawals must be initiated by the last date of withdrawal for the term as stated in the academic calendar.

Students will receive a withdrawal (“W”) designation on their transcript for each class in the current term.

A student who withdraws from all courses in an academic program that is at capacity or has sequential coursework and intends to return must discuss the withdrawal with the Dean and Program Director (if appropriate) to determine if a space in the program will be available upon the student’s return to the University. The student must also state in writing the reason(s) for withdrawal and include the date they expect to return to the University. The decision to retain a space is at the discretion of the Dean and Program Director. If a student is not enrolled at Maryville University for more than two (2) consecutive semesters, he/she must reapply for the University and the program through the Office of Admissions or Weekend and Evening College.

If the decision is made to retain a space for the student, the Dean and Program Director will notify the academic adviser and the Registrar of the decision and the anticipated reentry date of the student.

Graduate students must contact their program director in order to obtain the appropriate procedures and forms.

International students must contact the Office of Global Education to initiate the process of withdrawing from a course or from the University. An international student withdrawal form is necessary and requires signatures of both the Office of Global Education and the academic adviser.

New student tuition deposits, room deposits and any fees are nonrefundable.

Charges are determined by the student’s official withdrawal date as recorded in the Student Service Center.

Refund consideration is based on the balance after the prorated tuition charges are determined.

Any adjustments to financial aid is outlined below.

Contact a financial aid specialist in the Student Service Center when changing schedules or withdrawing from classes to determine the exact effect a revised academic schedule will have on a financial award.

The University reserves the right to withdraw a student whose academic progress is not satisfactory, or who does not comply with the regulations of the University and uphold its standards.

In such cases, the University is under no obligation to refund tuition or residence fees.

Students leaving a residence hall before the end of the semester must contact the director of residential life, who will determine if any adjustment of room and board charges will be made.

All legitimate credit balances will be refunded to the student within 30 days of confirmation of the amount of excess funds.

If a student requests in writing that funds be retained by the institution for the student, this will be done until the end of the current academic year.

At that time, a refund will be delivered to the student within 30 days of the last date of student attendance.

Undergraduate Financial Aid

Gift Aid

Gift aid includes scholarships (awards for academic achievement, community service, demonstrated leadership, etc.) and grants (funding to meet a student’s need as determined by the Federal formula used when filing a FAFSA). These programs reduce school costs but do not require repayment and/or work as a condition of receiving the funds.

Maryville has a wide range of institutional scholarship programs from the Presidential Scholarship (for incoming, full-time freshmen, covering tuition, and residence hall costs), Academic Scholarships for both incoming freshmen and new transfer students that are applied to tuition charges, Athletic Scholarships and endowed and restricted scholarships (with individual criteria such as state of residence, community service, program of study, etc).

Scholarships awarded directly to the student from outside sources are added to the award, becoming part of the total package of aid. The amount of the private award can impact eligibility in other programs as can the criteria of the program itself. It is important for all students to provide information regarding, the selection and renewal (if applicable) criteria, the amount and anticipated disbursement date for any outside scholarship or grant awarded to them to the Student Service Center as soon as possible to insure any impact on other aid or charges can be determined. Student athletes receiving private, outside funding are asked to complete and submit the NCAA Private Funding Certification Form.

Self-Help

Student loans (repaid with interest after leaving the University) may reduce both direct (tuition, fees, campus residence, books) and indirect costs (living expenses, transportation, day care). College work study or Institutional campus employment (working on or off campus) provide monthly paychecks through the University Payroll Department to the account specified by the student employee through the direct deposit process.

Federal loans allow students to defer payment until after leaving the University or dropping below half-time student status. Some loans carry an interest subsidy. All have long-term repayment and controlled, fixed interest rates. There are also privately funded alternative loan programs designed to supplement institutionally administered Federal loan programs. These are not federally insured and usually carry a higher, variable interest rate, mandatory, credit worthy cosigner and a favorable credit history.

Undergraduate campus employment is awarded through financial aid. It can be either on or off-campus, partially or completely funded by the University and requiring five to 15 hours per week throughout the semester. Earnings are deposited directly into the bank account specified by the student on a monthly basis after time sheets are submitted on the last day of the previous month of employment.

Need-based programs are determined by the federal government’s formula which affixes a value to a family’s income and assets. That value is the family’s “ability to pay” or Expected Family Contribution (EFC), sent to the University via the Federal Application for Aid (FAFSA), which is deducted from a school’s costs (tuition, fees, housing, books, miscellaneous, etc.) to establish a family’s need. Students must complete a FAFSA each year to determine a full financial aid package.

Financial Aid awards are a combination of available aid from the scholarships, grants, loans and employment programs for which students have established eligibility put together into a “package.” Aid is time sensitive so the March 1 Priority Deadline for application completion is very important to maximize funding.

Second undergraduate (and graduate) degrees may be funded through loan programs only. For students working on a second undergraduate degree, the only available aid is the Federal and private loan programs. The maximum allowable from the Federal Stafford Direct Student Loan Programs for any and all undergraduate course work is $57,500. Any money borrowed for the original baccalaureate degree would be deducted from the ceiling to determine loan funds still available. The actual dollar amount is determined by filing a FAFSA for each academic year of study. Students will receive notification of funding eligibility per semester and the criteria to receive and maintain that funding.

Graduate/Doctoral Financial Aid

Students accepted into a graduate or doctoral program taking a minimum of five credit hours per semester may apply for federally funded, long-term repayment Federal loans.

Each academic year of graduate coursework offers a maximum of $20,500 (6.8% interest) in available Federal Stafford Direct Loan funds. A graduate or doctoral candidate may also supplement Federal Stafford unsubsidized loans with the Federal Grad PLUS program which requires a credit check and carries a higher (7.9% fixed) interest rate. It begins accruing upon disbursement. Limited scholarship aid is available by School/College.

Financial Aid Online/Telephone Resources

www.collegeboard.org – Provides information about colleges and universities across the country, admissions requirements, funding opportunities and time lines.

www.aauw.org – Sponsored by the American Association of University Women, this site contains information directed to help promote education among women in all fields of study.

www.finaid.org – Federal website with extensive financial aid information including definitions, explanations and additional resources. One of the interactive features is an EFC Estimator with which an applicant can answer questions regarding income, asset, family size and number in college and be given an idea of the family’s expected contribution to college costs using federal methodology. It also will explain how this number then can be used to estimate funding available from schools of varying costs.

Annual Financial Aid Application Procedures

As early as possible after January 1 and keeping in mind the March 1 priority deadline to maximize funding eligibility, complete the FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid). This must be done for each academic year to determine all funding. Complete at www.fafsa.gov. Returning students complete a Renewal FAFSA.

Filing will require a PIN number. Both student and at least one parent (for dependent students) should have a PIN issued by the federal processing system. It is both a security code and identification number so it should be kept and used whenever accessing or revising information in the Federal database. It also serves as an e-signature for filing, correcting information on file in the Federal data base and signing Federal loan promissory notes.

If you do not have a PIN, you may apply for one at www.pin.ed.gov. With this individual code, you may electronically sign U.S. Department of Education documents including your FAFSA and promissory note for the Federal Direct student and parent loan programs. It also may be used to make corrections online, reapply for financial aid, view the federal loan database and add schools for data release. If you had a PIN but do not remember what it is, you may use this DOE website to request it be reissued.

If using estimated numbers when submitting the initial FAFSA, be certain to make corrections to estimated numbers reported on the FAFSA after the Federal 1040 tax return is completed. When filing the FAFSA, if the student and/or parents have already filed their Federal tax return, they may use the option to download 1040 data directly from the IRS to the FAFSA rather than entering the data manually. The system will populate the necessary fields with the appropriate answers.

If you have been selected for verification by the Federal processor, contact the Student Service Center to determine what additional paperwork is needed to complete your file for processing (IRS Tax Transcript, W-2 forms, Verification Worksheet, Tax Non-Filer form, Social Security Card, Selective Service Registration, citizenship documentation, etc.). Signed copies of Federal tax returns are not acceptible documentation for tax information reported on the FAFSA. If the student and/or parent did not use the IRS data retrieval option when completing the the FAFSA or later in the correction stage, IRS Transcripts procured from the Internal Revenue Service directly must be provided as part of the verification. To obtain IRS transcripts go to one of the following sources to make the request:

When providing inforamtion to identify the filers for which you want the transcripts, be certain the information is the mirror image of the information on the tax return (e.g. if the tax return reports you live at 10 North Street do not indicate 10 North St. in your request). Unless the data is exact, it will reject the request.

When your eligibility is determined and an award packaged, you will be notified by email how to access your Maryville Financial Aid Letter on your student portal under Access Maryville-Financial Aid. While grants and scholarships do not require any action on your part in order to signify acceptance of the award, campus employment as well as Federal student and parent loans will require the student’s acceptance or rejection through the portal. Loans require further processing with the Federal website and campus employment requires interviewing for available positions.

If any information changes, the award is subject to change. For example, if a student switches from a resident to a commuter, full- time to half-time, two family members in college to one, a private outside scholarship and/or loan is added to the funding-any of these might cause a change to the programs, amounts or criteria of a financial aid award. Should a change be necessitated, the student will receive an e-mail to review the changed award.

All scholarships are financial resources and, as such, must be taken into account when an award is being packaged. If you receive a scholarship from a source other than the University, notify the Student Service Center immediately if it does not appear on the award. Student athletes receiving private, outside funding are asked to complete and submit the NCAA Private Funding Certification Form.

Funding Availability

Funding sources, dollar amounts and criteria for receipt are determined by the formula used by the federal processor to determine a family’s ability to pay (EFC), the current academic level of the student, the number of credit hours taken, previous aid received and the number of weeks (or days) the class is in session.

The number of credit hours taken each semester is a major determinant in which financial aid program may provide funding. The enrollment ranges for undergraduate students working on their first undergraduate degree are as follows:

Should a student wish to pursue funding other than, or over and above, the programs administered by and through the University, information pertaining to alternative loan programs are available online on the Financial Aid menu under Online Resources. The University will work with any private lending institution the student selects. Students are not restricted to the companies listed on the website. They are intended as an information resource not an endorsement.

Federal Financial Aid Student Eligibility

Federal Aid is governed by congressional regulation through the Federal Department of Education which stipulates certain mandatory requirements in order to be considered for funding. Some of the regulations mandated for applicants to receive aid are:

U.S. citizen or eligible non-citizen with a valid Social Security Number.

High school graduate or General Education Development recipient (in some instances, an approved “ability to benefit” test is acceptable).

Official transcripts provided from all previously attended post secondary programs.

Accepted into a degree or certificate program.

If male between the ages of 18-25, registered with the Selective Service.

Not currently in default on federal student loan.

Not convicted of an offense involving either the possession or sale of illegal drugs.

Financial aid funds are finite. To insure that you receive funding from all available sources, apply early. Paperwork received and files completed after March 1 run the risk of amounts being diminished or programs being depleted.

Applicants for financial aid must be accepted for admission to the University as degree or certificate seeking students in order to qualify for any institutionally administered financial aid.

Students must apply for both merit-based (scholarships) and need-based (grants, loans, employment) financial aid each year. In the case of need-based financial aid, financial need may be recalculated, based on changes in University costs and family financial situations.

To ensure financial aid is in place to be used as all or part of a student’s semester payment arrangement, material must be received by the University no later than July 1 for fall and November 15 for spring terms.

The University reserves the right to transfer funds from one gift aid program to another. When an award is calculated, it is based on the information available at that time. If changes occur or additional information is obtained, this can affect the source and amount from which awards are ultimately provided.

Endowed Scholarships

The Alumni Scholarship — Established by the Maryville University Alumni Association, this is an ongoing endowment to promote intellectual achievement and campus participation. The recipient is chosen by the Alumni Board.

The Patricia Barrett Scholarship — The fund, established in 1979 by Maryville faculty and staff, recognizes the 40 years of exemplary service to Maryville by Sister Patricia Barrett, RSCJ. The scholarships are unrestricted with regard to student eligibility from the various academic areas.

Class of 1989 Scholarships — The Class of 1989 established this endowment as its senior class project. The recipient is a senior who has spent a minimum of his or her junior year at Maryville. A separate application is required.

The Mildred S. Dennis Scholarship — Established in memory of Mildred S. Dennis, alumna of the Class of 1934, this scholarship is awarded to students seeking a teaching career at the elementary, secondary or college/university level. Recipients are selected by the School of Education.

Susan Strake Dilworth Scholarship — Established by the Strake Foundation in honor and memory of Susan Strake Dilworth, alumna of the Class of 1946, this scholarship provides funding for graduates of Catholic high schools.

The Kelly Ellis-Johnson Scholarship — Established in memory of Kelly Ellis-Johnson, a Weekend College student who died in 1996, the scholarship is awarded to a junior-status Weekend and Evening College student with a minimum 3.0 G.P.A.

The Rose Muckerman Ezzell Scholarship — The funds, established by an endowed bequest from Mrs. Ezzell in 1982, have been used to help students of high academic achievement.

The Leicester and Mary Faust Scholarship — Mrs. Faust, established this program in 1987 to aid students in need of financial support.

The Mary Ellen and Charles E Finch Scholarship — Established in honor of Dr. Mary Ellen Finch, dean of Maryville’s School of Education from 1974 to 1998 and Charles E Finch, long-time high school teacher and coach, this scholarship is awarded to a student in Maryville’s Master of Arts Education/Secondary Teaching and Inquiry program. Recipients selected by the School of Education.

The Fine Arts Scholarship — This fund was established by the Faculty of Art & Design in 1982 to recognize students with outstanding creative ability in art and design. Recipients are selected by the Art & Design faculty.

The Edward Chase Garvey Scholarship — There are no restrictions on this scholarship, which was established in 1987 in memory of Mr. Edward Chase Garvey.

The General Endowed Scholarship — This scholarship was established in 1991 for any donations received toward an endowed scholarship that are not specifically designated.

The Stephen K. Georgieff Scholarship — Established in 1994 by Maryville faculty member Dr. Katja Georgieff in memory of her husband, Stephen K. Georgieff, this scholarship is awarded to a student with an interest in classical music.

The Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Guignon, Jr. Scholarship — This scholarship was established in 1995 in memory of Lelia O’Brien Guignon, alumna of the Class of 1932, by her husband, Paul C. Guignon, Jr. Preference is given to a female graduate of a Catholic high school majoring in education.

The Hearst Scholarship — The scholarship was established by the Hearst Foundation in 1986. Recipients are selected based on exceptional academic and personal achievement, and potential for future community leadership.

The Joe Hoerner Scholarship — Established in 1997 in memory of former Cardinals’ pitcher Joe Hoerner, a long-time volunteer on Maryville’s Athletic Advisory Committee, this scholarship is awarded to a former student-athlete pursuing graduate studies at Maryville.

The George A. Hughes Scholarship — George A. Hughes, whose sister, Mother Helen Hughes, taught biology and math at Maryville in the 1920s, established this scholarship bequest in 1972.

The Marie Kernaghan Scholarship Fund — Sister Marie Kernaghan, RSCJ, professor of science for more than 60 years, was recognized by the creation of this fund initiated by her former students. Sister Kernaghan was the first woman to receive a Ph.D. in physics from Saint Louis University. Kernaghan Hall, on the Maryville campus, bears her name.

The Ella Kinsella Scholarship — Ella Marie Kinsella, a turn-of-the-century alumna of Maryville, established this scholarship through a bequest in 1984. There are no restrictions.

The Dillon Thomas Kobel Scholarship — This scholarship is named for Dillon Thomas Kobel, the grandson of Pat Apel, ’87, director of Maryville’s Physical Plant, and his wife, Donna Apel, ’89.

The Chris Kutilek Endowed Scholarship — Established in 2002 in loving memory of Chris Kutilek, a 1995 Maryville graduate, by his family, Betty Kutilek, assistant registrar at Maryville, her husband, Frank, children Eric and Lori, and many friends and family members. This scholarship provides financial support for students studying art, communication or the humanities who have been active in recent extracurricular activities with every intention of participating, creating and encouraging on-campus programs and activities.

The Keith and Marsha Lovin Endowed Scholarship — This scholarship in honor of Dr. Keith Lovin and his wife, Marsha, was funded in 2005 by Maryville trustees, faculty/staff, alumni and friends on the occasion of Dr. Lovin’s retirement. Dr. Lovin was the President of Maryville from 1992-2005. While president, Dr. Lovin created the Institute for Leadership and Values; this Institute was renamed the Lovin Institute for Leadership and Values in honor of his retirement. This scholarship is restricted to students in the Institute.

The Elmer “Ike” and Mary Jane Martin Endowed Scholarship This scholarship was established by Maryville alumna Mary VanDersarl and her husband Dr. Jules VanDersarl in honor of Mrs. VanDersarl’s parents. This scholarship shall be awarded to students who meet one of the following criteria with preference given in the following order: (1.) A student who has graduated from Pius X High School in Crystal City, Mo. (2.) A Catholic student who has graduated from any high school in Jefferson County, Mo. (3.) A student who has graduated from any high school in Jefferson County, Mo.

The William Cullen McBride Scholarship — This scholarship was created by the daughters and granddaughters of William Cullen McBride. Those chosen to receive this award should be graduates of Catholic high schools.

The Betty von Brecht Mitchell Scholarship — Mrs. Joseph M. Mitchell, an alumna of Maryville, established this scholarship in 1986. It is to be used for students in need of financial aid.

The Thomas Moeller Scholarship — The family, friends and colleagues of Thomas Moeller established the scholarship in 1997 in recognition of his seven years of teaching at Maryville. It is designated for education majors with a middle-level concentration. Recipients selected by the School of Education.

The Monsanto Education Scholarship — The Monsanto Fund established the scholarship to provide funding to outstanding full-time undergraduates and part-time graduate students interested in science or mathematics education for early childhood/primary education. Recipients selected by the School of Education.

The Mother Marie Odeide Mouton Scholarship — Maryville’s first president served from 1937 to 1956. This scholarship was established by an alumnae committee. It is for an outstanding female student majoring in biology, chemistry, English, history, liberal studies, mathematical science or psychology.

The Clifford W. and Armarie B. Murphy Scholarship — Established in 2004 by Mrs. Armarie Murphy, a St. Louis philanthropist. There are no restrictions on this scholarship that is also named in memory of Mrs. Murphy’s husband, Cliff.

The Bernard and Sarah Murray Scholarship — This scholarship was established in 1945 to honor the parents of the donor, Mr. Edgar Murray of New Orleans, La. The recipient should be from a southern state.

The Newman Scholarship — The late Regina Newman established this scholarship in 1992 in memory of her husband, Dr. Ernest B. Newman. The scholarship is awarded to an Art & Design student. Recipients are selected by the Art & Design faculty.

The Mother Mary Philomena O’Meara Scholarship — This award was donated by Theresa O’Meara in honor of Mother Mary Philomena O’Meara, mistress general of Maryville from 1873 until 1884, when she became Superior. She served as Superior until 1888. The scholarship recipient must be a Catholic high school graduate.

The Dr. Margot Pallmann Scholarship — Established in 1998 as a tribute to Dr. Margot Pallmann, retired professor of Actuarial Science at Maryville, the scholarship is awarded to an Actuarial Science major.

The Irene Peterson Scholarship — Named in honor of Irene Peterson, this scholarship was established by the Business and Professional Women’s Club of St. Louis to assist women majoring in political science, legal studies or criminology.

Darryl Pope Endowed Scholarship — Edward Jones established this scholarship in honor of Mr. Darryl Pope, a longtime employee of Edward Jones who retired in 2004 after 45 years of distinguished service. Mr. Pope’s two daughters as well as his son-in-law graduated from Maryville. This scholarship is restricted to undergraduate and graduate students in the John E. Simon School of Business.

The Dr. Claudius and Marjorie Pritchard Scholarship — This scholarship was established in honor of Dr. Claudius Pritchard, the seventh president of Maryville, who served from 1977–92.

The Mary Reid Scholarship — Established by a Maryville College graduate who requested anonymity, this scholarship was named for Mother Mary Reid, RSCJ, who secured accreditation of Maryville as a junior college and as a full-time college.

The Odette Saizan Scholarship — Named for the donor, this scholarship is awarded annually to a deserving student, with preference given to a student from Louisiana.

The Caroline J. S. Sanders Scholarship — Endowed in 1988 by the Caroline J. S. Sanders Trust, with the understanding that the funds be awarded each year to a deserving student of high academic achievement.

The John E. Simon Scholarship — The late John E. Simon, long-time Maryville trustee and St. Louis philanthropist and investment banker, established this in honor of his late wife, Adaline, a nurse. This scholarship is awarded to an outstanding Maryville nursing student.

Southwestern Bell Teacher Scholarship — Donated by Southwestern Bell Co., this scholarship was established in 1991 to help support minority education majors.

The Jack and Julie Johnson Stein Endowed Scholarship —Established in 2003 by Julie Johnson Stein, a 1968 graduate of Maryville, and her husband, Jack. Julie has been a very active volunteer at Maryville and was the 2001 recipient of the University’s Volunteer Achievement Award.

The Jim Thomas Scholarship — The scholarship honors Jim Thomas, a long-time, well-loved member of the Maryville staff from 1952 to 1991.

The Pat Thompson Scholarship — Named in honor of a 1962 graduate of Maryville, this scholarship was established by Pat’s family and friends on the occasion of her receiving an alumni award from Maryville. Since its establishment, Pat has continued to generously support this scholarship in her name.

The Audrey and Norman C. Valleroy Endowed Scholarship — Established in 2004 by Dr. Geralyn M. Frandsen and her husband Gary M. Frandsen. Dr. Frandsen is a Maryville University alumnus and longtime faculty member in the Nursing Department. This scholarship is awarded to nursing students and is named in honor and memory of Dr. Frandsen’s parents.

The Patty Vogelgesang Scholarship — This fund was established in 1988 in memory of Maryville student Patty Vogelgesang by friends, relatives and faculty/staff of Maryville.

The Webb Foundation Scholarship — The Webb Foundation is a Midwestern philanthropic organization established in 1965. This endowment was donated to Maryville in 1987.

The Evelyn Yuan Scholarship — William Yuan and Evelyn, his wife, a Maryville graduate, established this scholarship in 1988 for academically gifted Asian students who are needy with a preference to students from China.

Veterans’ Benefits

Veterans and their dependents who may be eligible for benefits including the Yellow Ribbon Program can receive information and applications through the V.A. representative located in the Student Service Center.

The V.A. representative routinely reports eligibility, and when a veteran has withdrawn from a class or from the University, to the Veterans Administration Regional Offices, .

Vocational Rehabilitation

To apply for benefits, students with disabilities must contact the Vocational Rehabilitation Office, State of Missouri. Authorization to bill the Vocational Rehabilitation Office must be submitted to the Student Service Center by each semester’s payment deadline listed in class schedules.

Financial Aid Refund Policy

Financial Aid accepted by the student may be used to pay all or part of tuition, housing, board, fees, books and supplies unless they are tuition specific (e.g. Barat, Duchesne, Mouton Scholarships). In the event aid is not in place by the payment deadline, students should make alternative payment arrangements with the Student Service Center or online in their - My Maryville Account. Refunds created by disbursement of financial aid may be deposited into a student-specified account electronically or a check mailed to the student’s permanent address. Allow up to two weeks for either online transfer of funds or paper checks to be issued after funds are applied to the student’s account. To request a credit balance not be refunded, submit a request in writing to the Student Service Center. To have it refunded to a Payee or address other than the student, submit a request in writing with the student’s original signature. Credit balances may not be held after the end of the academic year.

Withdrawing From Classes

Students with University-approved financial aid who withdraw from classes before classes begin, forfeit all aid. If books and supplies have been charged to the student’s account, these items must be returned following Bookstore procedures. If they are not, this creates balance due to be paid immediately by the student. Any hours already worked for a college work-study assignment will be paid through the payroll process and deducted from any charges generated on the student’s account. If no charges exist, the check will be mailed using the permanent address on file for the student.

The date the Registrar determines as the “date of withdrawal” is used to determine any potential adjustment to financial aid. This date is:

the verifiable date the student began the withdrawal process
OR

the date the student provided official notification of the intent to withdraw
OR

for the student who does not follow the University’s withdrawal policy or notify the University of the intent to withdraw, the midpoint of the enrollment period for which aid was disbursed.

In each instance, if a later date of attendance can be documented, that is the date that will be used as the date of withdrawal.

When calculating the percentage of the semester completed, the total number of calendar days within the enrollment period will be divided into the number of calendar days from the beginning of the term until the student’s withdrawal date. Periods of five consecutive days or more in which classes are not held (e.g. Thanksgiving holiday or Spring Break) are not included in the equation.

The amount of funding earned (maintained) by the student is calculated by determining the percentage of the enrollment period completed as of the official date of withdrawal. The difference is the unearned portion of financial aid that will be refunded to the appropriate aid program. If the student withdraws after the 60 percent point in the semester, the percentage of assistance earned is 100 percent. Unearned funds will be refunded by the school to the appropriate financial aid program.

The amount the school must return is the lesser of the unearned amount of assistance, or the institutional charges incurred for the enrollment period multiplied by the unearned percentage.

The amount the student must return is the unearned assistance minus the amount the University returns. The order of program funding return is as follows:

Unsubsidized Federal direct loans

Subsidized Federal direct loans

Federal Perkins loan

Federal Grad PLUS

Federal Parent PLUS

Pell Grant

Academic Competitiveness Grant

SMART Grant

SEOG

Teach Grant

Aid yet to be disbursed for which the student is eligible is included in the calculation of earned and unearned assistance. When students (or parents in the case of a Parent PLUS loan) are required to return a portion or the entire loan proceeds, the calculated amount is to be repaid according to the terms of the loan program.

Students receiving aid from the State of Missouri requiring full-time enrollment as part of the funding criteria must be enrolled in 12 credit hours at the time the funds are received and disbursed. If the student has dropped below the requisite number of hours prior to this date, the funds will be returned to the State. A student must also maintain a cumulative grade point average of 2.4 for State funding.

Programs funded in their entirety by the University will be pro-rated at the same percentage used by Student Accounting in pro-rating tuition charges (percentage of aid can celled):

First week of classes

100 percent Refunded to Funding Program

Second week of classes

75 percent Refunded to Funding Program

Third week of classes

50 percent Refunded to Funding Program

Fourth week and Beyond

No Aid will be Refunded to Funding Program

Non-attendance of classes once registration is complete does not constitute official withdrawal from that class or the University. To ensure the appropriate and timely financial aid adjustment, be certain to follow the withdrawal procedures or call one of the registration centers or Student Service Center to determine the student’s responsibility in the process.

Refunds

In the event that a credit is generated on a student’s account, the Student Service Center will issue a refund to the student and either electronically transfer to a student specified account via the student’s online refund profile on My Account or mail a check to the permanent address on file. This process can take up to two weeks from the date of the credit-generating disbursement. Any changes added to the account after the refund is requested are the responsibility of the student and should be paid upon billing (e.g. bookstore charges, student fees including test or insurance fees, added classes, etc.) Any decrease in charges generating an additional credit once a refund has been delivered to the student will require a written request from the student in order to generate a second refund.

Students wanting credits to be maintained on his or her student account must request in writing a refund not be issued. Credits not absorbed by subsequent charges will be refunded to the student within 30 days of the end of the academic year for which the funds were disbursed.

Financial Aid Satisfactory Academic Progress Policy

These are the academic standards all financial aid applicants and recipients must meet:

Students must maintain the minimum GPA requirements needed for continued enrollment for academic progression (2.0). Students whose grade point averages place them on academic probation are eligible for financial aid if they meet the hour requirements specified below.

Students are encouraged to plan their course load in order to complete approximately one-fourth of the graduation requirements each year. Total financial aid eligibility is 150 percent of the published length of the program or 192 credits (at least 128 hours are required for baccalaureate graduation).

Number of hours needed are:

Full-time students must register for and successfully complete a minimum of 12 credit hours for each semester of enrollment for which full-time aid is received.

Three-quarter time students must register for and should successfully complete a minimum of nine credit hours for each semester of enrollment for which three-quarter time aid is received.

Half-time students must register for and should successfully complete a minimum of six credit hours for each semester of enrollment for which half-time aid is received.

Students must successfully complete the minimum number of hours each semester and each year.

Full-time students must successfully complete at least six (6) credits for one semester and 24 credits for the academic year.

Three-quarter time students must successfully complete four (4) credits for one semester and 18 credits for the academic year.

Half-time students must successfully complete two (2) credits for one semester and 12 credits for the academic year.

Repeated courses or courses with a grade of I (incomplete), DG, NA, NE, AF, F, NP or W (withdrawal) do not count toward the earned hours required for satisfactory progress determination. Aid will not pay for a course that is being repeated.

Every student’s progress will be evaluated as grades become available at the end of each semester. Financial Aid Warning will go into effect when the following occurs:

Full-time students complete less than 12 credits but at least six (6).

Three-quarter time students complete less than nine (9) credits but at least four (4).

Half-time students complete less than six (6) credits but at least two (2).

At the end of each semester, academic records are reviewed for all financial aid recipients to identify those who have not met the satisfactory academic progress standards. Students will receive notification if they are being placed on financial aid warning or suspension.

Financial Aid Warning allows a student one semester of continued aid at the end of which the total hours successfully completed must equal the minimum required for both semesters of aid (i.e., FT=24, QT=18, HT=12). Students passing the requisite number of hours by the end of the semester of warning will be fully reinstated and the warning status dropped. During the semester of warning, aid remains the same unless the cumulative GPA is too low for scholarship renewal.

If students fail to successfully complete the minimum hours by the end of the semester of warning, they are placed on Financial Aid Suspension. Students not passing the minimum of any single semester of funding (i.e., FT=6, QT=4, HT=2) are placed on financial aid suspension immediately.
Students placed on financial aid suspension may submit a written appeal to the Director of Financial Aid by the deadline indicated stating the reasons they believe there were extenuating circumstances that affected their academic performance, what has happened to eliminate these circumstances and an academic plan to correct the failure to progress satisfactorily. The Director of Financial Aid will refer the appeal to the Financial Aid Appeals Committee that will review the student request and statement of extenuating circumstances. The student will receive (via email) written confirmation of the Appeals Committee’s decision which, if the appeal is approved, will include an academic plan the student must follow to reinstate aid and change the suspension status to probation. A student may not appeal failure to meet the terms of the academic plan for aid reinstatement.

Students on financial aid suspension may be reinstated on probation after one year if they document satisfactory progress at Maryville or at another college or university during that period of time.

Students receiving institutional scholarship funding which carries an additional GPA requirement will be reviewed for credit hours progress each semester; however, the GPA will be monitored at the end of each academic year to determine renewability for the next academic year unless otherwise required by the program (e.g. TEACH Grant, Access Missouri).

Because of the time needed to procure and review academic progress, students should be aware of the minimum progress requirements and anticipate actions needed to address a semester where credits are not accumulated successfully.

*The use of full-time specification throughout this section refers to the academic requirement of a minimum of twelve (12) credit hours and not the pricing requirement of Weekend and Evening College students, which establishes full-time charges for students taking 13-18 credit hours.

Full-time, First Time undergraduate; financial need; Limited placement/first come first serve, students paid monthly for hours worked 10 days after the last day of the previous month of employment

$800–$2,400

Student Subsidized and Unsubsidized Loans

Minimum 1/2 time student status; Up to Federal Student Loan Limits per year and academic level, Subsidy determined by FAFSA and any previous borrowing

Freshmen (0-27 hrs)

$3,500

Sophomores (28-59 hrs)

$4,500

Juniors (60-89 hrs)

$5,500

Seniors (90-127 hrs) or 5th (128+)

$5,500

Student Unsubsidized Supplemental Loan

Minimum 1/2 time student status

$2,000

(Independent students)

Freshmen/Sophomores

$4,000

Juniors/Seniors/5th

$5,000

Graduate (enrolled in 5-18 hours)

$20,500

PLUS Parental Loan* (Dependent students)

Half-time student status

Cost of attendance minus student aid

Graduate PLUS (Independent students)

Half-time Graduate student status

Cost of attendance minus student aid

*Parents of dependent students (Parent PLUS) or Graduate student (Graduate PLUS) with an acceptable credit history can borrow from the federally funded PLUS loan program to cover the direct (tuition, fees, books) and indirect (living expenses, travel, insurance, etc.) not covered by the students’ funding. Offering low interest (7.9% ceiling) and long term repayment (ten years), the process to apply is completed at http://studentloans.gov.

Missouri Programs (for Missouri residents)

The State can Reduce the Amount of Any Program based on Appropriations that do not cover full funding of the recipients in each Program.

Academic Scholarship (Bright Flight)

Full-time undergraduate; composite on ACT or SAT in top 3 percent of MO students

$1,500

Access Missouri Grant (April 1 deadline)

Full-time, undergraduate, financial need, State requirements. Final amount subject to change with August appropriations and number of eligible recipients